Europeans need homelands.
I have spent 35 years saying the same thing about the United States. We need a homeland.
When Donald Trump was elected in 2016, I thought that in an offhand remark to reporters he might — just might — say, “What’s wrong with white people wanting to be the majority in the United States?”
I no longer think he has it in him. In this year’s inaugural address, he mentioned support from “African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Asian Americans.” He went on to say, “To the Black and Hispanic communities, I want to thank you.”
Mr. Trump got 80 percent of his 77 million votes from white people, but he didn’t mention us once.
I don’t think a guy who is 79 years old and still doesn’t understand race ever will.
There are more than 519,000 elected officials in the United States.
I don’t know of a single one who says what that Danish newspaper said about Danes: That we need a place where we are the majority. And yet, every year, millions more people come to understand what’s necessary for our survival.
Why do we have no political representation — not even on a city council or a school board?